To minimize procedural and fluoroscopic times and avoid the risks of vascular injury and pneumothorax, some investigators have advocated elimination of routine placement of a coronary sinus (CS) catheter during electrophysiological procedures. We hypothesized that expedient and reproducible CS catheterization could be performed with minimal patient risk by utilizing a femoral vein approach. Fifty consecutive patients referred for radiofrequency ablative procedures underwent attempted CS catheterization using a 6‐French steerable, quadripolar catheter via a femoral vein. Procedures were performed utilizing single‐plane fluoroscopy without contrast angiographic aid by operators experienced in the technique. Successful catheterization was defined by the attainment, in < 15 minutes, of a stable catheter position with the distal electrode at or beyond the lateral margin of the heart. Successful catheterization of the CS was achieved in 47 (94%) patients. Selective pacing of the left atrium without patient discomfort was possible in all, eliminating the need for a right atrial pacing catheter. The median time to successful catheterization was 1.4 minutes (range 0.3–14.7). Only six patients required > 5 minutes. The median fluoroscopic time required was 1.2 minutes (range 0.3–12.7). No clinical variable was predictive of catheterization failure or time to successful catheterization. No complications were observed as a result of this technique. This prospective evaluation demonstrates that catheterization of the CS via a femoral vein approach is highly successful, expedient, and safe. The ability to selectively pace the left atrium may eliminate the requirement for a right atrial catheter.
[1]
J. Hare,et al.
Repeated use of ablation catheters: a prospective study.
,
1993,
Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
[2]
G. Klein,et al.
Evaluation of an abbreviated protocol for catheter ablation of left free wall accessory pathways.
,
1993,
The American journal of cardiology.
[3]
K. Byth,et al.
Accuracy of various methods of localization of the orifice of the coronary sinus at electrophysiologic study.
,
1992,
The American journal of cardiology.
[4]
J. Langberg,et al.
Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation of Accessory Atrioventricular Connections in 250 Patients: Abbreviated Therapeutic Approach to Wolff‐Parkinson‐White Syndrome
,
1992,
Circulation.
[5]
K. Kuck,et al.
Single-catheter approach to radiofrequency current ablation of left-sided accessory pathways in patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.
,
1991,
Circulation.
[6]
M. Schluter,et al.
Single‐Catheter Approach to Radiofrequency Current Ablation of Left‐Sided Accessory Pathways in Patients With Wolff‐Parkinson‐White Syndrome
,
1991
.
[7]
A. Marmor,et al.
New approach for fluoroscopically guided transvenous catheterization of the coronary sinus.
,
1991,
Chest.